16 Or. Tax 9 | Or. T.C. | 2001
As of January 1, 1999, the county valued the lots at $124,000 each. (Ptf's Ex 1 at 1.) Over the following two years, taxpayer sold the lots for prices in the range of $86,800 to $112,000. The *11 Magistrate Division reduced the RMVs of the 10 lots to their ultimate sale prices.1 (Id.) Taxpayer requests this court to further reduce the RMVs to the prices at which they were ultimately sold with a time-trend of 9 percent back to January 1, 1999, resulting in values ranging from $70,681 to $95,570. (Id.) The county's Answer requests affirmation of the magistrate determination. At trial, the county submitted the appraisal report of John Alve, a registered property appraiser, and argued for Alve's opinions of value, which range from $101,600 to $114,500. (Inv's Ex I-A at 1.)
2. Should the court be limited by the pleadings when determining value in property tax cases?
The RMV of land is what in prior years was referred to as "true cash value." If is defined as "the amount in cash that could reasonably be expected to be paid by an informed buyer to an informed seller, each acting without compulsion in an arm's length transaction occurring as of the *12
assessment date for the tax year." ORS
Despite changes in statutory language, the fundamental value definition has been consistent for many years, and the law is clear that if a market exists for property of the kind being assessed, the property must be evaluated by the market data approach. Portland Canning Co. v. TaxCom.,
Taxpayer's main contention is that the values of the subject properties can be established by taking the ultimate sales3 of the lots in question and arriving at RMV by trending those sale prices back to the assessment date using a 9 percent discount factor.4 Taxpayer argues that it is a requirement that RMV be determined in all cases based uponthe sale price of the property. As discussed above, RMV is the amount in cash for which a property would be expected to sell as of an assessment date. Or Const, Art XI, § 11(11)(a); ORS
Taxpayer is proposing a formulaic approach to valuation that finds no basis in the statutory or case law of this state. Indeed, if taxpayer's suggested approach to valuation had validity, appraisals would have become unnecessary in valuation disputes and would have been replaced by simple projections backwards or forwards from actual sales. Any legal debate would have shifted from consideration of factors such as zoning, location, conditions of sale, and size, to a consideration of what the appropriate discount rate or rates should have been for various time periods. That is not what is reflected in the case law. See generallyWidmer v. Department of Revenue,
Challenging the taxpayer's contention that the discounted sale prices are the RMVs for the subject properties, the county argued that the sales were not arm's length transactions and that a change in the market occurred between the date of assessment and the sale dates. The county reasons that because some of the lots were sold in bulk, such a sale fails to accurately reflect the values of individual lots by asserting that a developer's discount was used to arrive at the sale prices. Such discounts are not representative of market value, but focus on an owner's interest. First Interstate Bank v. Dept. of Rev.,
In defense of its position, the county presented the appraisal report of Alve. (Inv's Ex I-A.) Alve performed a market data appraisal report using 40 comparable sales. Adjustments were made for dissimilarities from the subject properties, such as location, size, date of sale, topography, etc. Focusing on the five properties he found were most directly comparable, Alve developed a value per square foot figure, relying most heavily on the value indicator from the January 25, 1999, sale of a lot in the same subdivision as the subject properties. From this, Alve arrived at his opinion of values. Although taxpayer questioned Alve's appraisal, it did not show or provide any evidence that the appraisal is unreliable.
The county's pleading would not have been an issue between 1977 and September 1, 1997. During that period, ORS
The analysis in Bauman deals with the authority of this court under the former statute, which provided that this court could "affirm, reverse, modify or remand orders of the department."6 ORS
What is required in Oregon is "relative" uniformity, that is, uniform operation of law, not uniformity of consequences. Robinson et ux v. StateTax Com.
January 1, 1999, are in accordance with the Decision of the Magistrate Division as follows:
Account No. Current RMV Adjudicated Value
R2081715 (lot 1) $115,000 $112,000 R2081717 (lot 3) $115,000 $100,000 R2081718 (lot 4) $115,000 $100,000 R2081719 (lot 5) $115,000 $105,000 R2081720 (lot 6) $110,000 $ 97,500 R2081721 (lot 7) $104,000 $100,000 R2081722 (lot 8) $104,000 $ 98,500 R2081723 (lot 9) $104,000 $ 98,500 R2081724 (lot 10) $104,000 $ 98,500 R2081725 (lot 11) $ 98,500 $ 98,500
Judgment will be entered consistent with this Opinion. Costs to neither party.
ORS